Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJoleen Cameron Modified over 9 years ago
1
Vorlesung A Sociology of the Media Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K.
2
Details Sprechstunde: Di 10-12, Konradstraße 6, Zi. 205 Email: joost.vanloon@soziologie.uni- muenchen.de
3
Outline of the lecture 1.Media as Ubiquitous 2.Media as Black Box 3.Media as Phenomena 4.Technology as Ordering 5.Overview of Lectureseries
4
Media as Ubiquitous Our world can be characterized by an increase in mediatization Mediated communication is something we do rather than think about. Main focus has been on understanding media in service of something else, e.g. power, capital accumulation, ideology, social interaction, popular culture.
5
Media as Ubiquitous Studies that have tried to explore media-as- media, in terms of: (a) media corpporations, e.g. organizational practices (e.g. Cottle, 1993; Hall et al, 1978; Harrison, 2000; Schlesinger, 1987; Tuchman, 1978); (b) media products (primarily in the field of semiotics and screen theory and mainly concerned with media-content) (c) media-technologies, mainly by scholars associated with McLuhan
6
Phenomenology of Media Media-use Technological agency The strength of a phenomenological approach to media is that it problematizes exactly that which most communication studies approaches take for granted: the medium.
7
Media as Black Box Media studies has focused on either: (a) context (production, organization, distribution) (b) content (products, interpretation, consumption) And has by and large ignored the process of mediation. Black box –between context and content –between production and consumption –between intention and interpretation
8
Media as Phenomena As different from –Marxism/functionalism (e.g. political economy of media) –Public Sphere Theory (Habermas) –Liberal Pluralism (e.g. uses and gratifications theory, cultivation theory, audience studies) –Semiotics –Closer associations with new media theory
9
Mediation as … politics … social interaction … cultural reproduction
10
Technology as Ordering Technologies ‘enframe’ the world; that is they order them in the double sense of (a) providing a structure and (b) commanding specific actions. This ordering constitutes the essence of mediation.
11
Vorlesungsprogramme (1) Introduction 17.10.2007 Introduction (1): ubiquitous media 24.10.2007 Introduction (2): towards a phenomenology of mediation Approaches to Media Analysis 31.10.2007 Political Economy 07.11.2007 Semiotics14.11.2007Audience Research Media Forms 21.11.2007 Mechanical Reproduction (Benjamin) 28.11.2007 Electronic Reproduction (Williams) 05.12.2007 Digital Reproduction (Baudrillard)
12
Vorlesungsprogramme (2) Media Histories 12.12.2007Media Evolutions (Innis) 19.12.2007 Media Revolutions (McLuhan) Media Cultures 09.01.2008 Everyday Life and Domestication 16.01.2008 Identity and Subjectivity 23.01.2008 The Public Sphere Media and the Body 30.01.2008 Perception and Sensibility 06.02.2008 Media and (Dis)Embodiment: gendered and networked being
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.